As I have said multiple times before, rule 3.17 coutneracts this. Effectively the rules state this; The wing can only flex when scrutineering and when standing still, when it is moving it has to be rigidly secured. We all know you cannot do that, apart from making a part rigidly secured, which is impossible too.JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:Im sorry that doesnt wash, Richard.richard_leeds wrote:The race series is based on a contrived formula based on decades of accumulated quirks, anomalies and interpretations. Success is found by exploiting those quirks, anomalies and interpretations more effectively than other competitors. If the rules were perfect then we’d have a lot less innovation. There would have been no DDD, F-Duct or flexi wing. How dull.
All rule books have contradictions, and in this case the regulator has been very clear and very consistent in the interpretation of the contradiction. Hence the formula is very clearly defined, job done.
The double diffuser was legal. It was legal by the letter of law and fell within the parameters set by the FIA. It was clever in interpretation.
The F-duct similarly, was a device effectively using the driver as a device to close a hole that makes the wing stall. There was no rule for it to transgress.
What we have with Red Bull is bending bodywork which is a flagrant transgression of rule 3.15 as we have seen at length on this discussion.
must remain immobile in relation to the sprung part of the car
must be rigidly secured to the entirely sprung part of the car (rigidly secured means not having any degree of freedom)
To me, and to anyone with a modicum of sense and eyesight this would make the RB7 wing illegal as its a direct trangression of rules. Forget even the fabled spiritual trangression!
That's an interesting idea. AFAIK the nose crash structure and bodywork are separate entities. The thing that is crash tested is a simplified nose shape that fits inside a bodywork cover. That allows them to play with the bodywork shape without changing the homologated crash structure.wesley123 wrote: I mean, is the nose crash structure body work or a safety device? afaik that isnt defined per rules, so you have a loophole there.
This is really the point of interest.The rules state it has to be rigid and IMMOBILE.richard_leeds wrote:JET - we all know that it is impossible for an object to be completely immobile and rigid.
Then why not force the teams to integrate a carbon road with a aero-profile that is to be mounted on the foremost part of the nose and on both extremities of the FW.wesley123 wrote:As I have said multiple times before, rule 3.17 coutneracts this. Effectively the rules state this; The wing can only flex when scrutineering and when standing still, when it is moving it has to be rigidly secured. We all know you cannot do that, apart from making a part rigidly secured, which is impossible too.
As i read the rules it means; Under a 1000N load it can flex for 20mm, outside that it can flex for unlimited ammounts. Apart from that, isnt it possible that you could use a whole nose, including front wing or w/e flexes use as a crashbox? I mean, is the nose crash structure body work or a safety device? afaik that isnt defined per rules, so you have a loophole there.
I think this is where we are falling down Wesley.wesley123 wrote: As i read the rules it means; Under a 1000N load it can flex for 20mm, outside that it can flex for unlimited ammounts.
Circumventing as in passing it, but then flexing in the real world as we have all seen, in conflict with 3.15.richard_leeds wrote:Who's circumventing the test? All the cars pass the test, they all jump through the hoop as required.
hardingfv32 wrote:So now the designer, engineer, tech officials and stewards must be concerned with how the wing "looks" when in use on the track. Can you please provide guidelines or dimensions for the correct "look"? Are many protests successful because something did not "look" correct?
Brian
It was talked about earlier in the thread. I gather its standard practice to have a separate CS and a nose "skin" that carries the front wing stays. Not sure what anyone still thinks of nose flex. I'm not as convinced anymore in light of the rake geometry discussion. Maybe it flexes, if so, working with the other factors discussed by scarbs & others:richard_leeds wrote:So what do you think off the twin nose idea?